It would have been opened within the last 26 hours, if that helps.
I can say that if someone had smoked in MY car 2 days ago and it had been opened up once, I'd smell it
That very thing has happened at a BMW dealer's repair shop, which has an excellent reputation and puts plastic AND their signature paper ( RME) all over the car before doing work.
I can smell just a tiny hint of cigarette smoke smell for days after someone smoked in a medium or small area. I can smell it in an office that's been closed up and empty for months and has great ventilation. I had to open an office like that once. Having the carpets and draperies cleaned professionally took 90% of the smell away as did industrial ventilation fans for a few days.
I totally agree with the poster who said that the humidity level plays a HUGE part. When our neighbors, who aren't close, burn wood in their fireplace, if it's a rainy or very humid day, I can't go outdoors. ( I'm that allergic to smoke). I don't have asthma or any other respiratory disease. I have inhalation allergic responses to fumes my body perceives as noxious. Now, at my age, my brain perceives the scent to be noxious as well, but this was not true as a child. I'd just end up in the hospital with pneumonia ( 3 times before the age of 2 years, which is extremely reactive and abnormal) and bouts of bronchitis and pneumonia throughout my life.
I have visited friends or toured open for sale condos and apartments before which had either an adjoining wall in the case of townhomes or had a downstairs or upstairs neighbor, and I'd not rent the apartment if the neighbor smoked. I could definitely smell it and NO ONE else could.
I'd be gasping, wheezing and truly physically reacting to the smoke, and the person showing the property, or my friends if I was a visitor, would be going " What the heck? Don't smell a thing here."
When we were house hunting for a week in this state, we were shown houses that were empty and had been empty for months. Hardwood floors, fresh paint. I could smell smoke even then if a smoker had been the previous owner or member of owner's family.
If my mail carrier smokes, I will get sick opening a package. My husband has to open most of my packages which are textiles ( clothing) as I get very ill.
I've received items direct shipped from Asia, and they were textile items which absorb cigarette smoke. They must have a love for the worst tobacco in the world there, because I've had to store many items from Amazon in the garage until hubby could get it to the dry cleaners.
I can smell it on the clothing of a FAMILY MEMBER of a smoker. In fact, I interviewed housekeepers two weeks ago, and did not hire the probable best candidate because her clothing was so horrendously full of cigarette smoke. My husband didn't smell a THING. I was about to gag, and she was sitting at the end of our long dining room table from me.
I am hypersensitive to all smells, I admit. It's a genetic thing, apparently.
The horrid stench of tobacco tops the list of normal, non- hospital noxious smells unless I'm in Europe, then it's the car emissions. I almost keel over in the streets of fine major cities from the pollution vehicles their vehicles are allowed to emit.
If we could do an in-person test, I think you'd be shocked. Men have a much poorer sense of smell than women. The percentage difference is really striking. Add the difference to a female who is hypersensitive to all smells, I don't single out tobacco, I smell everything that has a scent acutely.
The one bright spot about this is that apparently someone who was present when Ray's Mini was opened has the same hypersensitivity to scents. Ray, as an older male, likely didn't have it.
Doctors are now doing " smell tests" to test for dementia and other brain related disorders. Peanut butter is usually the first object used in the test. Loss of sense of smell is strongly associated with pre-dementia or early brain diseases of almost all types.
Maybe I'm going to escape that curse?